The threading Module

(Optional) The threading module is a higher-level interface for threading, demonstrated in Example 3-1. It’s modeled after the Java thread facilities. Like the lower-level thread module, it’s only available if your interpreter was built with thread support.

To create a new thread, subclass the Thread class and define the run method. To run such threads, create one or more instances of that class, and call the start method. Each instance’s run method will execute in its own thread.

Example 3-1. Using the threading Module

File: threading-example-1.py

import threading
import time, random

class Counter:
    def _ _init_ _(self):
        self.lock = threading.Lock()
        self.value = 0

    def increment(self):
        self.lock.acquire() # critical section
        self.value = value = self.value + 1
        self.lock.release()
        return value

counter = Counter()

class Worker(threading.Thread):

    def run(self):
        for i in range(10):
            # pretend we're doing something that takes 10—100 ms
            value = counter.increment() # increment global counter
            time.sleep(random.randint(10, 100) / 1000.0)
            print self.getName(), "-- task", i, "finished", value

#
# try it

for i in range(10):
    Worker().start() # start a worker

Thread-1 -- task 0 finished 1
Thread-3 -- task 0 finished 3
Thread-7 -- task 0 finished 8
Thread-1 -- task 1 finished 7
Thread-4 -- task 0 Thread-5 -- task 0 finished 4
finished 5
Thread-8 -- task 0 Thread-6 -- task 0 finished 9
finished 6
...
Thread-6 -- task 9 finished 98
Thread-4 -- task 9 finished 99
Thread-9 -- task ...

Get Python Standard Library now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.